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Female Indian pilot almost kills 100 passengers

Ganga

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On January 11, when IndiGo Airlines' flight 6E 333 had a bumpy touchdown at Goa International Airport, it was a close brush with disaster for over 100 passengers aboard the A 320. The woman pilot in command landed the plane on its fragile nose wheel - an erroneous manoeuvre that could have even led to the flying machine disintegrating and catching fire
Alarmingly, an inquiry conducted later by the Director General of Civil Aviation (DGCA) revealed that on 15 to 20 earlier occasions, Captain Parminder Kaur Gulati landed the aircraft at an angle indicating that the nose wheel may have touched the tarmac first. This is unheard of in aviation circles.
Aircraft normally land on the main landing gear (MLG), comprising the two sets of rear wheels. After these bigger - and sturdier - wheels touch the runway, the speed of the plane is reduced. This is followed by the already opened nose landing gear (NLG) - the smaller front wheel just below the cockpit of the aircraft - coming in contact with the surface.

Flight 6E 333 took off from Indira Gandhi International Airport in Delhi and was bound for Goa.

Abhas Gupta was Gulati's copilot aboard the aircraft.

Captain Gulati appeared to have been so oblivious to the abnormal and highly risky touchdown at the Goa International Airport that she just reported the incident as a "rough landing". Not only did the steep descent leave the passengers' hearts in their mouths, it went against the recommendations of aircraft manufacturer Airbus, too.

This was not the end of the matter.

After the rough landing in Goa, Gulati and the engineer concerned merely carried out a inspection of the aircraft and reported that everything was normal.

The airbus was, therefore, cleared to fly back to Delhi.

The Indigo flight 6E 332 - with passengers on board - started its return journey to Delhi. But midway through, the plane's electronic systems signalled a problem in the landing gear. The warning related to the nose undercarriage being internally damaged.

The electronic signal that flashed in the cockpit showed that the landing gear didn't retract because it was stuck in the "down position". The Indigo aircraft had to then return to Goa to offload the passengers.

Later, it took off from Goa without the passengers and landed at IGI Airport.

The combined probe carried out by the DGCA, Airbus and IndiGo confirmed that the aircraft had landed on the NLG first, followed by the MLG. "This is a non-conventional landing," the report accessed by MAIL TODAY said.

Gulati's flying history came under the scanner of the investigators.

An analysis of the digital flight data recorder (DFDR) of the aircraft she previously flew pointed out that in her 15-20 earlier landings the 'touchdown attitude' was 3.8 degrees, which went against the recommended attitude of 5.8 degrees. Though within the safety zone, this increased the chances of the nose wheel touching first, the report stated.

The standard glide angle followed by an aircraft during descent is 3 degrees and the nose of the aircraft should be at 2.5 degrees at the horizon level. Just before touchdown, the latter is increased to 5 degrees. However, in the IndiGo flight's case, the pilot gave a negative pitch attitude and reduced the angle to 3.8 degrees resulting in the aircraft landing on the NLG. The report disclosed that the auto pilot was disconnected at 311 feet above ground level. At 100 feet, the captain gave a pitch-up command to ensure that the MLG touched the runway first. "At the last moment (around 10-20 feet), the captain gave a nose-down input. This resulted in a negative pitch attitude during touchdown," the document revealed.

The regulator (DGCA) and the investigation board recommended that the pilot should be sent on correctional training.

IndiGo CEO Aditya Ghosh admitted that the pilot had landed the aircraft on its nose wheel. He further claimed that all the recommendations made by IndiGo pertaining to the incident had been accepted by the DGCA. "Indigo conducted an investigation and the inquiry board recommended that the captain should be sent on training to correct her landing technique. She was also advised to undertake a cockpit resource management refresher course as well as a route check. She has already undergone these procedures," Ghosh said. Significantly, the lady captain has earlier been counselled for a serious error in the go-around approach during a landing at the IGI Airport.

Commenting on the incident, aviation expert Captain A. Ranganathan said: "The nose wheel can't take the impact of landing. The pilot's landing on the plane's nose could have led to serious consequences. The episode shows there was a deficiency in training." Former DGCA Kanu Gohain also felt that it was a very serious incident since the NLG is the weakest part of the aircraft and not designed to handle its landing weight. For the passengers, it was nothing less than a miraculous escape.
DGCA finds fault with IndiGo pilot's landing technique : North: India Today
 
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She repeats the same mistake around 20 times and all the airline does is to send her for a refresher course.You got to be shitting me!!! .I just bought an Indigo ticket yesterday to fly to Pune.Jeez
 
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She is just try out a new thing! But not allowed this kind of try with passengers any more.
 
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what her gender has to do with? male Indian pilots nearly banged the aircraft into another at Delhi airport in the past. one such incident i saw myself it was such a hair raiser . so cancel their license as well
 
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what is this gender based discrimination in faulty flying too!!! Kya kar rahe ho yaar.
 
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Someone please cancel her flying licence.:angry:

Buddy the DGCA is nothing but another corrupt government organisation.I was shocked when I read that some pilots in Indian airlines did not even complete their basic flight training and got their licenses.They had bribed some official in DGCA.Think about it.In this case at least she is qualified.
 
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Flying Officer Gunjan Saxena:First indian woman to fly in war zone of kargil in 1999

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WHEN Flying Officer Gunjan Saxena conducted her first sortie into the Kargil zone last week, she created history in defence. She became the first Indian woman to fly into combat zone, thereby opening up a vista which till now has traditionally been a male preserve.

"I could not wait to be called," says Saxena, based in Udhampur, but currently stationed at the operational zone in Srinagar. In the 10 daring sorties

she has undertaken during the past one week on the Cheetah helicopter of the Indian Air Force (iaf), she has dropped vital supplies to troops at higher points in the Dras and Batalik sectors, picked up the dead and wounded from jagged mountain edges where flying a chopper requires an inordinate amount of skill, all while escaping Pakistani gunfire and missiles from below.

The real challenge, according to her, was to go into operations which the IAF gave her a chance to do. "There is no problem about gender as all of us get the same opportunities. Initially the people were a little stunned," she recalls with a laugh, "but now they are used to it."

Saxena has been having a good share of the action in the last two weeks. And the Cheetah she has been flying has had a key role in the operations because of its manoeuverability. "That is the advantage with Cheetah. It is such a light chopper that it can virtually land and take off from anywhere," she points out. But operating choppers can be tough business in the mountains. For one, going into such combat entails the danger of the chopper being shot down. Saxena is prepared for that. On board she carries an AK assault rifle and a smaller pistol.

"There is an element of thrill and challenge in this that is not possible in commercial flying," says Saxena, who at 24 has already spent three years in the airforce. After graduating from Delhi's Hansraj College, the air force was enlisting women pilots and Saxena, whose father and brother are in the army, opted for what seemed like a natural vocation. Thus in 1994, she became one of the 25 young women comprising the first batch of women iaf trainee pilots.

Saxena has already logged 650 flying hours including 400 hours as captain and the rest as co-pilot and trainee. While on training, the recruits had the option to go in either for choppers or for transport planes. Saxena opted for the former. "This was a new area of work and it fascinated me."

Her ambition? To keep on flying, logging in more and more hours and going into combat whenever duty calls. Kargil was just the first test case she succeeded in. And how.




http://www.outlookindia.com/printarticle.aspx?207781
 
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Buddy the DGCA is nothing but another corrupt government organisation.I was shocked when I read that some pilots in Indian airlines did not even complete their basic flight training and got their licenses.They had bribed some official in DGCA.Think about it.In this case at least she is qualified.

Do u know the amount?
i want to apply for a licence:rofl:
 
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